Technus

@Technus@lemmy.zip

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

Technus,

Ironically I feel like PC parts would be easier to get. Just call it something generic on the customs declaration, they won’t know the difference. A corrupt customs official or post office worker isn’t gonna steal something if they’re not sure they’ll be able to fence it easily.

Technus,

Motherboard: emission control unit for 2004 Toyota Hilux

Technus,

This is why I want an electric car that makes a jet turbine noise like the cars do in sci-fi movies.

Technus,

I have heard this as well. IMO it’s much too quiet still. I want like, an actual jet engine whine but at maybe 65-70 decibels.

Technus,

To everyone else who laughed at this: how are your knees doing, old timer?

A Ticketmaster hack spilled sensitive data for 560 million customers, hackers say (qz.com)

ShinyHunters posted on Tuesday night in a hacking forum that it obtained data from Ticketmaster and its parent company, Live Nation, including customers’ names, addresses, emails, phone numbers, and order details, Cyber Daily wrote. The group is reportedly attempting to sell the stolen data for $500 million....

Technus,

Guess I have a new wave of spam calls to look forward to.

Technus,

inb4 Russia steamrolls through Lithuania to get around the barrier

Technus,

I actually wonder how much in the article is actually deliberate misinformation meant to trip up anyone trying to build their own device.

For example, this bit caught my attention:

In modern weapons, the neutron generator is a high-voltage vacuum tube containing a particle accelerator which bombards a deuterium/tritium-metal hydride target with deuterium and tritium ions. The resulting small-scale fusion produces neutrons at a protected location outside the physics package, from which they penetrate the pit.

That seems really finicky to me.

Technus,

More like forcibly feminized a young slave that resembled his late wife, whom he had beaten to death. I wouldn’t exactly hold him up as an ally.

Technus,

How do you know when someone is a vegan?

Don’t worry, they’ll tell you.

Technus,

You think that lemon mascot fucks?

Technus,

Oh it definitely eats something, that’s for sure.

Technus,

I feel like a zombie wouldn’t be able to consent. If they can speak intelligently, they’re not a zombie, they’re something else.

As for marriage, I think the contract would be automatically void, “til death do us part” and all that.

Technus,

It’s not even summer yet and I’m already contemplating if I can afford to move to New Zealand for half the year.

Technus,

Forget dating apps. Is there a Lemmy community like R4R? If there is, I can’t find one.

Technus,

Don’t call Q a God, we’d never heard the end of it.

Technus, (edited )

You can apply this same logic to basically all of chemistry:

H: explosive, the main ingredient in stars

O: literally the reason fire is a thing, causes rust and kills cells via free radicals

H2O: I’m so wet, UwU

No internet in virtual machine

I have on the host machine two network interfaces. One is lan and the other is a wlan. For libvirt I have created a nat network which is bound to the wlan. From the guest I can access other machines in the network host wlan is connected to. Also DNS lookup works. The problem is that there’s no connection to the internet at...

Technus,

This only happens when both network connection on the host are active.

I’m not a networking expert by any means but this seems like a pretty strong hint that it’s a routing issue.

Check the routing tables on the host? I’d bet that the internet is only reachable on the LAN interface (again, not an expert but one of them has to take priority, right?). I’m guessing that disconnecting the LAN interface changes the routing to go through the WLAN interface instead.

You could possibly add a static route to work around this: libvirt.org/formatnetwork.html#static-routes

Technus,

Neuralink, owned by controversial billionaire Elon Musk, believes it can prevent thread movement in the next patient by simply implanting the fine wires deeper into brain tissue. The company is planning on—and the FDA has reportedly signed off on—implanting the threads 8 millimeters into the brain of the second trial participant rather than the 3 mm to 5 mm depth used in Arbaugh’s implantation.

Yeah, “just shove it in deeper” sounds like a brilliant plan.

Maybe it’ll work, maybe it won’t, but if I was that second patient I wouldn’t exactly be feeling super confident about their approach.

Technus,

You’d think somewhere amongst the literal thousands of animals they maimed and killed, they’d have figured out how to prevent a simple mechanical issue like “the electrodes won’t stay in place”

Technus,

If this was something they knew could happen, why didn’t they prepare the patient so he’d know what to expect? Informing the patient of what can go wrong is an important step in even routine surgery, let alone experimentation.

Moreover, it would have blunted this exact criticism if they were simply to say, “yes, this is something we expected from our trials but we specifically chose this depth to start with for these reasons”.

The actual blog post only mentions the thread retraction in passing: neuralink.com/…/prime-study-progress-update-user-…

Technus,

Don’t let this fool you into thinking AI is green. Finland is certainly not the only place they’re going to be expanding datacenters.

Technus,

I think you’d have an even harder time offloading the diamonds than gold. They might retail for that much, but wholesaling is another issue entirely.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • JUstTest
  • rosin
  • mdbf
  • tacticalgear
  • osvaldo12
  • InstantRegret
  • DreamBathrooms
  • cubers
  • magazineikmin
  • thenastyranch
  • khanakhh
  • Youngstown
  • slotface
  • kavyap
  • megavids
  • ethstaker
  • tester
  • GTA5RPClips
  • Durango
  • modclub
  • Leos
  • ngwrru68w68
  • everett
  • anitta
  • cisconetworking
  • provamag3
  • normalnudes
  • lostlight
  • All magazines